Thanks
Trevor. They certainly did and I still have some Brown Hairstreak action waiting in the wings

.
Thanks
David, I consider myself fortunate to have a site close to me where them coming down and behaving themselves seems to be pretty much normal these days.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
August 2023
Friday 11th. With Brown Hairstreaks seemingly out at records numbers it was easy to forget about some other species. The Grayling being one, so I set aside today to go to Chobham Common, my usual hunting ground for them. It wasn’t the sunniest day but it was plenty warm enough and they turned up in all the usual places, the males like staking out territories along the paths, invariably popping up under your foot and bouncing off down the path or circling you in seeming annoyance at your presence.
As well as the paths, tree trunks are readily used here, Silver Birch and Scots Pine being the most common victims.
and a couple of pictures that fall under the 'spot the grayling' banner!
Looking at the literature, most Grayling abs concern the upperside, so unless you’re an avid collector (a dying breed thankfully) they’re a rare and lucky sighting. The underside I noticed today though does also vary a fair bit, not only in the ground colour but also in the white band on the hindwing… when it exists at all.
Also represented today were all three of the golden Skippers found here, a solitary Holly Blue and a rather nice Small Copper.
Finally, trundling along the path, I found a Goat Moth caterpillar, a huge beastie that spends its life eating the wood of a variety of tree species, slowly chewing its way through branches and tree trunks. The nutritionally poor diet means it’s a very slow growing and can take up to five years before its fully grown, I suspect this one is about that age and was looking for somewhere to spend its last winter. Their common name comes from the fact that both the larvae and adults have a goat like smell (I didn’t give him a sniff so cannot personally verify this detail)